Pan Fusheng

Pan Fusheng
潘复生
First Secretary of the Pingyuan Province Committee of the Communist Party
In office
August 1949 – March 1950
Succeeded byWu De
First Secretary of the Henan Province Committee of the Communist Party
In office
1952–1958
Preceded byZhang Xi
Succeeded byWu Zhipu
First Secretary of the Heilongjiang Province Committee of the Communist Party
(Head of Revolutionary Committee 1966–71)
In office
1965–1971
Preceded byOuyang Qin
Succeeded byWang Jiadao
Personal details
BornDecember 1908
Wendeng, Shandong
DiedApril 1980 (aged 71)
Harbin, Heilongjiang
Political partyChinese Communist Party

Pan Fusheng (Chinese: ; December 1908 – April 1980) was a Chinese Communist revolutionary and politician. He was the first party secretary of the short-lived Pingyuan Province of the People's Republic of China, and also served as the First Secretary (i.e. party chief) of Henan and Heilongjiang provinces.

During the Great Leap Forward, Pan sympathized with Marshal Peng Dehuai, a critic of Mao Zedong's collectivization policy. As a result, in 1958, he was dismissed as party chief of Henan and subjected to persecution, but was later rehabilitated.

When the Cultural Revolution began, Pan, then party chief of Heilongjiang province, embraced the rebel Red Guards movement and gained the support of Mao. However, he was soon involved in major factional violence, and was dismissed again in 1971 and put under investigation. In 1982, the Chinese Communist Party posthumously criticized him for committing "serious mistakes" during the Cultural Revolution.[1]

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